Title | Claps | Level | Year | L/Y |
---|---|---|---|---|
Finding utility for genetic diagnostics in the developing world
Ridhi Tariyal
Genetic testing companies have come under fire
lately for an array of reasons. Many direct-to-consumer outfits are
being challenged by the federal regulatory authorities, by the
physicians' community and by the public itself. The desire to
derive ut…
Genetic testing companies have come under fire
lately for an array of reasons. Many direct-to-consumer outfits are
being challenged by the federal regulatory authorities, by the
physicians' community and by the public itself. The desire to
derive utility from the existing mass of genetic research is only
outpaced by the sheer amount of new information being added to our
understanding daily. These genetic testing companies are
simultaneously trying to apply the existing knowledge, build a base
for further study and be credible, going concerns from a business
perspective. It is a worthy but difficult objective. The
direct-to-consumer genetic initiatives face resistance from
physicians who are the traditional intermediaries between medical
insight and application of this insight. The companies also face a
strong adversary in a government that wants to protect its
constituents from fraudulent marketing claims and misinformation.
Recent, informal studies have also exposed flaws in the product
offerings and delivery of information by these companies. Finally,
these are all for-profit entities which are struggling to become
profitable. The objective of this thesis is to identify an
attractive consumer base and opportunity that would allow for
successful deployment of genetic diagnostic capability. I postulate
that the success of a direct-to-consumer company would depend on
finding a customer that values the genetic insight deeply and is
able to take action from such insight. Based on those two
fundamental criteria-perceived value and actionable utility-I build
a profile of place, person and disease to test my hypothesis.
Driven by the findings of my research, I anchored my hypothesis
around an Indian consumer who pays for health care out-of-pocket,
is vulnerable to certain genetic diseases due to narrow, endogamous
customs and has grown up in a culture of arranged marriages. If
this individual's religious and moral code forbids early
termination of pregnancy or if financial and logistical
circumstances make abortion impossible, I posit the desire for this
cohort to use pre-marital genetic testing will increase. My
research showed that people born in India and people who had
considered arranged marriage as a viable option (the two groups
overlapped but not completely) did display a greater likelihood of
using genetic tests at the pre-marital and pre-natal stage to make
informed decisions about family planning. These groups also showed
a greater inclination towards early termination of pregnancy as
well as reconsidering partner choice based on the outcome of
genetic testing. However, the data also showed that those groups
that did not believe in abortion still did not preferentially want
a pre-marital genetic test.
|
0
|
0 | 2010 |
Social Media Posts